Even though I added to the collection of economics humor just last month (as well as in August and March), I have more items that are worth sharing.
I’ve written serious critiques of Biden’s fiscal plan – both the original version (which fortunately did not get approved) and the watered-down version (which sadly did get enacted) – but today’s first bit of satire is a much more succinct depiction of why it was a bad proposal.
I’ve also written about young people and their disturbing infatuation with socialism.
Our next item summarize their mental disconnect.
Our third item is very appropriate for those who draw the wrong conclusions from Wagner’s Law.
I’ve written about how governments are very incompetent when dealing with infrastructure.
Here’s the visual version of those columns.
If you want more infrastructure-themed humor, click here.
Per tradition, I’ve saved the best for last, though this one only makes sense when you understand that “neoliberal” is a term for classical liberalism (i.e., libertarianism), especially outside the United States.
If you want more economics-themed humor, click here, here, here, here, and here.
[…] shared four columns of economics humor in 2023 (March, August, November, and December), so we’re due for our first 2024 […]
Oiltranslator is right, but we all know logic is an illegal method in today’s political world.
Interesting that logical inference relies on premises located in past experience, while probabilistic extrapolation also requires existing measurements as a starting point. Yet all Climate Cassandras lay claim to premises that ought to exist now–premises they are convinced surely will soon–or would, in a just world.